Endocervical cells उन कोशिकाओं को कहते हैं जो गर्भाशय के ग्रीवा (cervix) के अंदरूनी हिस्से में पाई जाती हैं। ये कोशिकाएँ गर्भाशय ग्रीवा की सुरक्षात्मक परत का हिस्सा होती हैं और आमतौर पर गर्भाशय ग्रीवा के स्वास्थ्य और जनन स्वास्थ्य की जांच के लिए महत्वपूर्ण होती हैं। इन कोशिकाओं की उपस्थिति या अनुपस्थिति से विभिन्न स्वास्थ्य स्थितियों का संकेत मिल सकता है।
Endocervical and/or squamous cells are normal on a pap smear. This notation on your result means the test was complete.
If the endocervical cells in the pap test results are positive, then it means having a positive outlook that can lead to a greater sense of well being.
vaginal, endocervical,cervical
vaginal, endocervical, cervical
No endocervical cells on a pap smear means that the pap was not completely adequate. This result can occur if the opening of the cervical canal is very narrow. It does not typically indicate a problem, but may require repeat testing soon.
There is no danger from a pap result with absent endocervical cells. This notation just means that there was incomplete sampling. The cause may be hormonal, or anatomical, but it means nothing for your health. Repeat the test as recommended by your health care provider.
Searching with the same question, I found this answer at: http://www.drfeelgood.com.au/articles/tests/understanding_pap_smears.htm The canal inside the cervix (endocervical canal) which leads to the uterus cavity is lined by cells which make a transition to become those of the internal lining of the uterus. The transition point can easily vary from woman to woman and even from time to time in the same woman. This transition is not visible with the naked eye. One theory is that the abnormal calls occur at the point of transition. This is why a doctor aims to get a sample from the endocervical canal. A pap smear result routinely reports the presence or absence of these endocervical cells. The aim is to have a representation of endocervical component ensuring that the transition point has been past. It is important to check with your doctor that the endocervical component is present. I always use a brush inserted into the cervix canal when I do a pap smear . I tell the patient whether I feel I have adequately sampled the area. If there is no endocervical component present I discuss with the patient that forcing the brush up any further may not be appropriate. We discuss risks versus benefits of screening tests and decide together whether we will take any further action on the matter.
The endocervical component may be missing in a Pap smear if the sample was not collected properly and did not include cells from the endocervix. This could result from inadequate sampling technique or the sample being taken from the wrong area of the cervix. It is important to ensure proper collection techniques to obtain a representative sample for accurate evaluation.
Cells are not part of cells, your question makes no sense.
Lysosomes are present in animal cells but not plant cells.
During Pap smear collection, the health care provider tries to sample both the ectocervix (the part of the cervix you can easily touch with a finger), and the endocervix (the part inside the opening in your cervix). The part of the smear that comes from inside is the endocervical component. A pap result that notes "no endocervical component" is not suggesting disease, but noting that the lab test is limited because on of the parts is missin.
All your genes are present in your liver cells